Abby:
"However, he was on his way to work. I think the ripper was cunning and planned his murders (to the extent he picked which nights he went out hunting) so i find it highly unlikely JtR would kill on the way to work with all the problems that would entail"
It is a fair remark. Then again, Cross was a married man too, so maybe the walk to work was what provided him with the best opportunity?
What conveniencies he would have had to brush up at Pickfords or on his way there - who knows? It is not easy to say to what extend it was called for either.
If the killer got lots of blood on him, then somebody walked the streets drenched in blood without anybody picking up on it. Better then to make the guess that the killer did NOT get much blood on him, and could therefore take to the streets unnoticed.
As for the timing, Cross said he left home around 3.30 and he found Nichols 3.45 or thereabouts. And it took only a few minutes to walk from his dwellings to the murder site, not a full quarter of an hour at any stretch. Michael Connor timed the distance to five, possibly six minutes. So IF Cross left home at 3.30, then he had around ten minutes to pick up Nichols, take her into Buck´s Row, kill her - and find out that Paul was on his way.
The Ripper was a fast worker, so the time issue is not that important, I feel. In a matter of minutes, he could find and despatch a victim, we all know that - Eddowes makes it very clear.
The Cross scenario calls for a cool customer, yes - but only the coolest of customers kill and eviscerate in the open streets.
The best,
Fisherman
"However, he was on his way to work. I think the ripper was cunning and planned his murders (to the extent he picked which nights he went out hunting) so i find it highly unlikely JtR would kill on the way to work with all the problems that would entail"
It is a fair remark. Then again, Cross was a married man too, so maybe the walk to work was what provided him with the best opportunity?
What conveniencies he would have had to brush up at Pickfords or on his way there - who knows? It is not easy to say to what extend it was called for either.
If the killer got lots of blood on him, then somebody walked the streets drenched in blood without anybody picking up on it. Better then to make the guess that the killer did NOT get much blood on him, and could therefore take to the streets unnoticed.
As for the timing, Cross said he left home around 3.30 and he found Nichols 3.45 or thereabouts. And it took only a few minutes to walk from his dwellings to the murder site, not a full quarter of an hour at any stretch. Michael Connor timed the distance to five, possibly six minutes. So IF Cross left home at 3.30, then he had around ten minutes to pick up Nichols, take her into Buck´s Row, kill her - and find out that Paul was on his way.
The Ripper was a fast worker, so the time issue is not that important, I feel. In a matter of minutes, he could find and despatch a victim, we all know that - Eddowes makes it very clear.
The Cross scenario calls for a cool customer, yes - but only the coolest of customers kill and eviscerate in the open streets.
The best,
Fisherman
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